A Great Idea

These things are one of the biggest innovations, in my mind, in recent years to power rack design.

Several advantages:

You can fail a heavy rep halfway up without destroying your bar and/or the traditional steel safety spotter bars.

They also open up the possibility for more comfortably (and quietly) doing rack lockouts, ie: setting the bar down at the bottom of each rep and having to start the rep at the bottom.

When the straps are positioned a certain way, you can feel the bar touching the straps at the bottom of the rep before it gets to a point where the straps stop the bar, giving you an excellent tactile indicator of your rep’s depth, unlike the hard jolt of safety bars.

What’s Been Going On

Warning: Not all safety straps are created equal.

Those straps ripped right apart at the stitching from 405 being dropped on them. That’s 200 lbs per side. At a 10,000 lb rating each, they should have held up even considering the shock load from the falling weight.

In April 2018, this Youtuber received a letter from Titan Fitness warning him not to use their safety straps anymore, that there are quality problems leading to failure, and that they will be sending out replacements at the end of the month.

Presumably the letter was sent to all owners of their safety straps. They also offered refunds for the straps when requested.

Update Dec 2018 – Titan came out with redesigned straps. See the section further below about them.

Quick Rant on Safety

He and another lifter suggested using the normal steel safety bars as a backup, sitting just below the straps in case the straps fail. 

The spirit of that suggestion I like. Mitigate a risk by creating a redundancy. An engineer would be proud. Here, that’s a bad solution, in my opinion, even temporarily. Maybe I’m just more adverse to risk, but if I don’t feel like each element of my redundant system can be trusted on its own then it’s not redundant system at all.

Plus, you should be setting the straps at the lowest height you can to keep them out of the way while still saving your bacon as needed. If you’re going to set the safety bars below that, the safety bars will serve little purpose. 

The whole point of a power rack over a smaller squat stand – or a bench press unit – that has no safety spotter system is the SAFETIES! If you can’t trust the straps that you carefully set at the perfect height, the whole system is pointless. 

I’m really not that annoyed at the lifters who suggest using the safety bars as a backup. They’re working with what they have at the moment, I’m sure will be careful, and they plan on getting a better solution established soon with replacement straps. I’m mostly just annoyed that Titan never tested these or would let such a critical safety issue slip through.

I should note that I have a Titan X-3 rack and am happy with it. Titan has been responsive to customer feedback, and they have made several iterations of improvements on their racks. Hopefully Titan will learn a big quality control lesson with this mistake, and it will never happen again.

It’s the Stitching

It’s not the strap material. It’s the stitching that fails. Or it could be both, but the stitching is what’s failing first. 

This knowledge sent me to do research on the stitching, and stitching material, used on Titan’s straps. Maybe I could get a high res image and start comparing. Alas, as of writing, Titan removed all of their older safety straps from their site. 

Titan's old power rack safety straps
image credit: Jason Sebastian

Luckily, I found a video close-up of Titan’s old straps. This is called a box-x stitching pattern. That’s fine, as far as the pattern. A box-x is used all the time, particularly for applications where the direction of force is variable. 

Note that there is only a single box-x. Two would be better. But with the way Titan’s straps were failing, I don’t expect that would have made a difference. It appears to be the thread that was the problem.

Rep Fitness also had some safety straps prone to failure. In their case, the steel brackets for their straps made in the back half of 2020 were not welded correctly on all sides. In early 2021 they corrected the issue.

So as we go through some other designs below, including Titan’s new one, I’ll point out the stitching and how it differs from Titan’s original one.

So What Brands of Safety Straps Are Good?

The Original: Spud, Inc

original
Spud Inc’s suspension straps

Spud, Inc was the first one to innovate these as their “suspension straps“. At the time, everyone was doubtful. How could a piece of nylon be trusted like a big steel bar? Well, they have held up by all accounts.

Ropes and webbing made of nylon and other materials have earned trust in the last 20 years in the boating, climbing and aviation communities, where the consequences for failure are just as severe as a failed rep with 405. Once you get used to it, and test it safely, you’ll realize how strong the stuff is. Gym equipment is simply catching up to the technology. Steel power racks with safety bars were invented 100 years ago. Maybe it’s time for a change.

Spud’s suspension straps universally fit any power racks. They hung from the upper frame of the rack, on either side of the bar, so you would be touching the straps as you lowered the weight down for each rep, reversing your rep just short of the loop at the bottom of the strap. Works pretty good!

However, Spud Inc’s strap design has some issues. The straps can slide around, and you want to make sure the chain is in the right position, either on the top, bottom, or right in the middle, depending on whether you want it to scratch up your rack, your bar, or clink against your bar as you go up and down in your reps. This prompted another design.

Sorinex

Around 2011, Sorinex noticed how reliably they worked and came out with straps designed in the same manner as traditional safety bars, attaching to Sorinex rack uprights via brackets and hanging horizontally. They are a better solution, because they are easier to adjust precisely via the upright holes and don’t touch your bar at all until they’re needed.

Here’s a lifter testing the Sorinex straps with 365 lb.

That’s some serious confidence in the straps to be dropping 365 on your neck. Sorinex passes the test! Theirs is 42.5″ long to attach to 3″x3″ tubing.

Rogue Fitness

Rogue, of course, has excellent straps as well that no doubt have gone through plenty of testing as they do with everything. Rogue is known to not compromise on safety. They have a few models/depths to choose from:

Rogue strap safeties for power rack

Rogue’s stitching goes all the way up through the loop, and they have an additional layer of material stitched on top to prevent wear from the bar knurling to the structural stitching underneath. Smart!

Unlike some attachments, the pegs on any safety strap brackets don’t have to fit well into the holes on the rack uprights for these to work. The straps just hang down anyway. So the Infinity and Monster Lite straps work for 5/8″ holes, 1″ holes, or anything in between.

Rep Fitness Straps as of January 2021

As mentioned further above, the steel brackets on Rep’s straps made during part of 2020 were prone to failure. They issued a recall and fixed the issue in Jan 2021 for current models.

Rep Fitness has some heavy duty 30″ or 41″ straps for the PR-5000 rack, or 24″, 30″ or 41″ for the PR-4000.

Rep squat rack strap safeties

Their stitching extends all the way down the straps. The resulting stitching doesn’t look as clean as Rogue, but it’s good.

Basement Brandon did a drop test on these new ones to make sure they worked…

Titan Straps as of mid-2018

Good news! Titan came through by fixing the problem, as they have with other issues in the past. They use a stronger thread now, and they have upgraded straps for al of their power racks.

Titan Fitness upgraded stronger safety strap system
Titan’s upgraded safety straps.

The stitching closing the loop has a V pattern instead of the box-X. Oddly enough, the several versions of straps, to fit each model of rack on their website, appear to have a slightly different stitching pattern, but they are all a V pattern. More importantly, the thread looks to be thicker, or at least it’s starkly visible with white thread so you can see its integrity visually.

Titan treated it as an urgent issue and got to work on it. It was another couple months before they were satisfied with the new version and had them listed again on their website.

Coop did a test with 800 lbs…

Abusing the strap safeties on a power cage

That about settles it. They will hold up to catching an unreasonably high drop from a fully loaded barbell.

Replacement Straps

Lift Supply sells USA-made straps that you could use as replacement straps on an existing set of brackets, if you decide your straps are not good enough or they get damaged.

StrapWorks has some too, with several nylon and polyester options, any of which will work. Nylon is technically the strongest, while polyester is slicker and more resistant to pilling or fraying.

Other Brands and Compatibility

We have a list of power rack attachments by size, to help you pick various brands of attachments that will fit your rack, including safety straps.

Safety straps in particular are an attachment that do not have to fit perfectly on the rack to be perfectly safe. A little bit of slop in the length of the strap or in the fitting on the rack’s upright is fine, as long as it locks into position securely. So you have a few options with some racks.

Important: Strap Length

To best understand the issue here, first consider that when straps fit the rack too tightly, the bar resting on them wants to roll to the middle. This isn’t good, because it can mean it’s going to roll back into you when you bail a squat, or it will crush your midsection when you fail a bench press.

To prevent that, attach one bracket of each strap higher on the rack upright, moving the low hanging point of the strap to where you need it. You can do that to a huge degree with the Rogue and Sorinex straps, which hang quite loosely. The Rep straps hang tighter, but I confirmed with Alida at Rep Fitness that theirs are long enough to do it.

Being able to adjust the height on each side has the added advantage of fine-tuning the strap height to where you need it, just below the bottom of your range of motion. For example, if the hole spacing of your rack is 2″, this method allows you to adjust the height in 1″ increments.

Next, load your bar with some weight on the straps to test the height. The best height isn’t as obvious as with steel safety bars.

Any thoughts you have about using straps instead of traditional safety bars? Share in the comments below!